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marmar

(77,053 posts)
Fri Sep 11, 2015, 07:53 PM Sep 2015

The Death Spiral Of M. Night Shyamalan’s Career


The Death Spiral Of M. Night Shyamalan’s Career
12:23 PM By WALT HICKEY


The director M. Night Shyamalan is out on Friday with a new movie, “The Visit,” a film about two kids who have a lovely time hanging out with their grandparents.1

In classic Shyamalan fashion, the movie may provide a pretty huge shock: It’s earning a good score on Rotten Tomatoes! Not a great score, but leagues ahead of what we’d expect based on the director’s recent work. How did one of the most promising directors of the early 2000s get to the point where we’re expecting schlock?

Incorporating data from Rotten Tomatoes and OpusData, let’s review the story of how Shyamalan tanked his directorial reputation, and the small-budget horror comedy that might redeem it.



THE GOLDEN AGE OF M. NIGHT SHYAMALAN

“The Sixth Sense” is a really good movie. The film is about a troubled child learning how to cope with the help of a psychologist friend (Bruce Willis) who’s learning how to move on with his life.2 “The Sixth Sense” made an alarming amount of money — it was the second-highest grossing film of 1999 — and generally pulled the carpet out from under the feet of audiences, earning an 85 percent certified fresh Rotten Tomatoes rating from critics and an 89 percent favorable score from fans.

.......(snip).......

THE BREAKING POINT

In 2004, “The Village” constituted a bit of a breaking point for Shyamalan. The film featured Bryce Dallas Howard, Joaquin Phoenix and Academy-Award-winner/future-“Dragon Blade”-star Adrien Brody as people mixed up in a deranged Colonial Williamsburg situation5. Financially and critically, it was the worst of Shyamalan’s wide-release movies at the time. ..............(more)

http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/the-death-spiral-of-m-night-shyamalans-career/




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The Death Spiral Of M. Night Shyamalan’s Career (Original Post) marmar Sep 2015 OP
I liked "The Village", I don't get the hate. ProudToBeBlueInRhody Sep 2015 #1
I liked "The Happening" and "After Earth." yallerdawg Sep 2015 #2
The visit glitterbag May 2016 #3
Isn't there a book about him? bbmykel Jun 2016 #4
I liked Unbreakable TexasBushwhacker Jul 2016 #5

yallerdawg

(16,104 posts)
2. I liked "The Happening" and "After Earth."
Fri Sep 11, 2015, 09:28 PM
Sep 2015

"The Sixth Sense" and "Signs" were great movies.

"The Village" and "Unbreakable" were pretty good. How good a director do you have to be to get this quiet, emotionally understated acting out of Bruce Willis and Mel Gibson?

Coppola and Scorcese have some dogs out there.

"The Visit" looks good!

glitterbag

(45 posts)
3. The visit
Fri May 20, 2016, 12:58 AM
May 2016

we saw 'The Visit' last weekend, I liked it quite a lot. it might not be his best movie ever, but it was creepy and made me jump out of my chair more than a few times. Between the two of us we have many years of movie watching experience, but there was a plot twist that neither one of saw coming. I'd watch it again.

bbmykel

(282 posts)
4. Isn't there a book about him?
Wed Jun 15, 2016, 07:25 PM
Jun 2016

Some sort of Hollywood tell-all that kind of paints him as an out of control egoist?

I have to say I was never a fan. I didn't much care for "Sixth Sense" and pretty much hated "The Village" and "Signs" which are the only others I've seen. That said, I'm sorry that his career has kind of gone south, but that may have as much to do with how he's conducted his business as his talent.

His fall kind of reminds me of Michael Cimino. I never did much care for "The Deer Hunter" either

TexasBushwhacker

(20,137 posts)
5. I liked Unbreakable
Tue Jul 19, 2016, 07:49 PM
Jul 2016

The thing that's funny was that while he didn't continue to make blockbusters, his movies were still profitable, just not as much as 6th Sense and Signs. For its tiny budget, The Visit did very well.

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